Fine-Scale in Situ Measurement of Riverbed Nitrate Production and

Mar 16, 2014 - and Mark Trimmer*. ,‡. †. School of Geography, Queen Mary University of London, Mile End Road, London E1 4NS, United Kingdom. ‡...
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Fine-Scale in Situ Measurement of Riverbed Nitrate Production and Consumption in an Armored Permeable Riverbed Katrina Lansdown,*,†,‡ Catherine M. Heppell,† Matteo Dossena,‡ Sami Ullah,§,⊥ A. Louise Heathwaite,§ Andrew Binley,§ Hao Zhang,§ and Mark Trimmer*,‡ †

School of Geography, Queen Mary University of London, Mile End Road, London E1 4NS, United Kingdom School of Biological and Chemical Sciences, Queen Mary University of London, Mile End Road, London E1 4NS, United Kingdom § Lancaster Environment Centre, Lancaster University, Lancaster LA1 4YQ, United Kingdom ‡

S Supporting Information *

ABSTRACT: Alteration of the global nitrogen cycle by man has increased nitrogen loading in waterways considerably, often with harmful consequences for aquatic ecosystems. Dynamic redox conditions within riverbeds support a variety of nitrogen transformations, some of which can attenuate this burden. In reality, however, assessing the importance of processes besides perhaps denitrification is difficult, due to a sparseness of data, especially in situ, where sediment structure and hydrologic pathways are intact. Here we show in situ within a permeable riverbed, through injections of 15N-labeled substrates, that nitrate can be either consumed through denitrification or produced through nitrification, at a previously unresolved fine (centimeter) scale. Nitrification and denitrification occupy different niches in the riverbed, with denitrification occurring across a broad chemical gradient while nitrification is restricted to more oxic sediments. The narrow niche width for nitrification is in effect a break point, with the switch from activity “on” to activity “off” regulated by interactions between subsurface chemistry and hydrology. Although maxima for denitrification and nitrification occur at opposing ends of a chemical gradient, high potentials for both nitrate production and consumption can overlap when groundwater upwelling is strong.



INTRODUCTION The anthropogenic near doubling of bioavailable fixed nitrogen (N) has undoubtedly put huge pressure on the environment,1 particularly within the hydrosphere, where surplus N affects the ecology, quality and value of aquatic ecosystems.2,3 Some fixed N can be removed in anoxic zones within the landscape by microbial N2 production (both denitrification,1,4 the reduction of nitrate (NO3−) to N2 gas, and anaerobic ammonium oxidation (anammox)5,6). Riverbeds, with their high surface area-to-volume ratios,7 are recognized hotspots of N transformation.8 Uncertainty about the different pathways of NO 3 − production and consumption in the riverbed hampers efforts to upscale N dynamics from the patch to the reach and ultimately the entire catchment.4,9 Very few direct measurements of riverbed nitrification, oxidation of ammonium (NH4+) to NO3−, exist as research has concentrated on the activity of only the superficial sediments10−13 or simply equated NO3− “surplus” relative to a conservative tracer with nitrification.14,15 Although denitrification has been more heavily studied, use of the acetylene block technique, which inhibits nitrification, destroying any coupling between NO3− production and consumption,16,17 has been widespread.16−18 Further, the acetylene block assay is specific to denitrification, other pathways of nitrate consumption, e.g., dissimilatory nitrate © 2014 American Chemical Society

reduction to ammonium (DNRA) or anammox are not quantified.19 Equating NO3− “deficit” relative to a conservative tracer with denitrification has also been used extensively,20−23 ignoring all other mechanisms of NO3− attenuation as per the acetylene block technique. Neither of these methods, therefore, can accurately quantify true rates of denitrification.24,25 More recently, 15N and N2-to-argon ratios have been employed to quantify in situ rates of denitrification12,15,26−28 but these mainly target superficial sediments,29 although unlike nitrification, there are some examples of direct denitrification measurement deeper within the riverbed.30−32 The focus on N transformations at the riverbed surface is likely because biogeochemical activity, intensified through groundwater− surface water exchange, is often restricted to these shallow sediments.33−35 Groundwater−surface water exchange can, however, influence sediments much deeper in the riverbed, e.g., >5 cm,32,36,37 stimulating NO3− reduction particularly within groundwater-fed rivers.38,39 Yet, how nitrate production and consumption is oriented along upwelling flow paths in Received: Revised: Accepted: Published: 4425

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dx.doi.org/10.1021/es4056005 | Environ. Sci. Technol. 2014, 48, 4425−4434

Environmental Science & Technology

Article

Figure 1. Schematic of probes used for push−pull measurements within an armored permeable riverbed (a, not to scale) and a photograph of probes installed within collars (b). Changes in chloride concentrations over time (c) indicate mixing of the tracer (4000 μmol L−1) with ambient porewater and loss of tracer through advection. Data shown are average values from the VF hydrologic setting, n = 22, 27, and 27 for 3−10, 11−20 and 21−40 cm, respectively, with error bars of 1 standard deviation and an exponential trend line fitted through each series. Panel d shows a typical time series of 15 N−N2 production over time following the injection of 15NO3− and includes both raw and advective flow corrected values (white and black symbols, respectively). Solid lines are linear trend lines applied to the data in order to calculate denitrification rates.

and chemical environments within a groundwater-fed, permeable riverbed influence nitrification, denitrification and DNRA. Rather than distinct zonation of nitrate production and consumption along flow pathways, we hypothesized that fine-scale physicochemical heterogeneity will lead to patches of nitrification and denitrification overlapping within the riverbed.

groundwater-fed rivers is relatively unknown, compared with along horizontal flow pathways,15,27 for example. Riverbed N cycling was originally conceptualized as a mosaic of processes occurring over small spatial scales, i.e., at the scale of individual grains, denitrification, nitrification, DNRA, sorption, assimilation and N2-fixation proceed within adjacent microsites of oxia and anoxia.14 Yet, there are no direct measurements to support this hypothesis. The riverbed was then seen as NO3− source or sink, depending upon the balance between rates of sediment metabolism and the supply of organic matter from the river above.35,40 Recent studies have shown that subsurface hydrology can also influence NO3− production and consumption, proposing that N transformations are separated by residence time along meter-scale flow paths, with nitrification dominating where oxygenated surface waters enter the riverbed, and denitrification occurring further along flow pathways once oxygen has been respired.15,41 Yet, denitrification can be enhanced where surface water enters the riverbed,33 suggesting that, perhaps, N dynamics could better be described by inclusion of fine-scale heterogeneity within larger scale separation of net NO3− consumption or production along flow pathways, for example. We contend that although overall, the physical, chemical and microbial controls on NO3− production and consumption are largely understood, the measurement of such processes and the validation of these controls in situ in the riverbed, where both hydrologic and redox environment are intact, is severely lacking. Our objective, therefore, was to examine how physical



EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES Study Site and Hydrologic Setting. We conducted our study in the River Leith (Cliburn, U.K.; Figure 1, Supporting Information) within a 200 m reach used for a larger parent project (implications of groundwater−surface water connectivity on riverbed N transformations). Here, the River Leith meanders through a narrow predominantly agricultural floodplain, where a series of riffle and pool sequences characterize the channel and sediments consist of loose gravelly alluvium overlying unconsolidated sandstone bedrock;42 although some sections of the riverbed are armored by cobbles and coarse gravels. Much of the reach examined is actively gaining groundwater42 which, although below targets set in the EUWater Framework Directive, has higher NO3− concentrations than the river itself.43 Previous research at this site had demonstrated a potential for riverbed NO3− attenuation,38,43 but no in situ measurements had been attempted to date. We selected two riffles with markedly different subsurface hydrology and redox conditions, where previous research had linked the fate of NO3− in this riverbed to its connectivity with the overlying river.42,44 One riffle was characterized by strong 4426

dx.doi.org/10.1021/es4056005 | Environ. Sci. Technol. 2014, 48, 4425−4434

Environmental Science & Technology

Article

solution contained 15NO3− (98 atom % 15N, Sigma Aldrich) at the same concentration as ambient porewater 14NO3− and was bubbled with oxygen-free nitrogen gas to mimic ambient O2 conditions. Here, the porewaters are high in 14NO3−, so to avoid increasing the NO3− concentration further at the 15Nlabeling required to distinguish denitrification from anammox (15NO3−:14NO3− > ∼0.6, see ref 47), we used artificial river water48 as the matrix for the tracer solution. The artificial river water was tailored to match the major ion chemistry of the River Leith but contained additional KCl (final concentration of ∼4 mmol L−1) for determination of tracer loss by advective flow. For nitrification measurements, the tracer deliberately contained a higher concentration of NH4+ than most ambient porewater (median NH4+ concentration = 3 μmol L−1, maximum = 207 μmol L−1 see Table 1 cf. 120 μmol L−1 of

vertical flux of groundwater toward the river (VF), while subsurface hydrology within the other was a mixture of horizontal (either lateral inputs from the riparian zone and/or hyporheic exchange flows) and vertical fluxes (HF-VF; Figure 1 and Table 1, Supporting Information). Fieldwork was performed under base flow conditions (